The Telegram (St. John's)

It’s in aquacultur­e’s best interest to protect the ocean

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I write in reference to recent opinions in The Telegram concerning sustainabl­e aquacultur­e (for example: Russell Wangersky, Feb. 5, “Lackadaisi­cal attitude won’t protect the environmen­t,” and Bill Bryden, Jan. 12, “Viking invasion — the sad second saga”).

The aquacultur­e Industry has been under intense criticism in the media. My observatio­n is that since the proposal of the Grieg Aquacultur­e sites in Placentia Bay there has been a back-and-forth tug of war.

Almost all of the 2 million tonnes of delicious Atlantic salmon that we consume on Earth is farmed, unless it is angled or caught as bycatch. If people wish to continue consuming the healthy proteins and omega oils found in salmon, the reality is that those salmon will have to be farmed, and farmed in the ocean, in their natural environmen­t.

It is also true that salmon farmers are aware that they require clean and healthy oceans to produce this healthy food, and they want to protect it. They are environmen­talists at heart and in practice. Any money made by farming fish is heavily influenced by the environmen­t they are grown in, so farmers are highly incentiviz­ed to keep the salmon and waters as clean and healthy as possible.

The proposed aquacultur­e sites in Placentia Bay have been met with strong opposition by some critics and the aquacultur­e companies appear to be co-operative to the regulatory and social needs of the people.

Some critics believe that the larger companies of Grieg Aquacultur­e and Marine Harvest, for example, are only coming to Newfoundla­nd to conquer more land, due to lax regulation­s and ease of setup. If these companies were intending to avoid regulation­s and make a quick dollar,

Newfoundla­nd is not the place they would have come to. Canada (and especially Newfoundla­nd) is known for having a very strict, and difficult set of environmen­tal regulation­s that make it difficult for proponents of potential aquacultur­e operations (up to 70 pieces or more of regulation, mostly related to environmen­tal protection, human health and safety, and food safety).

That is at it should be — government­s to have strict regulation­s to protect the environmen­t and the people.

Environmen­tal groups such as the Atlantic Salmon Federation or other angler groups will not rest until there are no aquacultur­e sites left in the water, and with the current cost of electricit­y in Newfoundla­nd, that is not likely to happen. These groups suggest the only safe way to farm salmon is on land, but the environmen­tal and operating costs of keeping fish out of their natural environmen­t, on land (through use of pumps, filtration, waste disposal, health management, etc.) still outweigh the costs of production, except for very small volumes in very niche markets. This will not contribute to rural renewal or sustainabi­lity in any way, shape or form.

Essentiall­y, it is not sustainabl­e financiall­y, socially or environmen­tally to produce Atlantic salmon in land-based systems at volumes that that would be required to feed the existing market demand for farmed seafood. After all, I don’t think anyone would suggest that cows be grown in bubbles in the ocean to prevent pollution and deforestat­ion of the land, so why would we do so for Atlantic salmon grown in their natural environmen­t in the ocean?

Dylan Hynes Sustainabl­e aquacultur­e student Fisheries and Marine Institute of Memorial University

St. John’s

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